Thunderbird is a total redesign of the
Mozilla mail component to produce a
cross-platform, stand-alone mail application using
the XUL user interface language. It has many new
features, among them the ability to customize
your toolbars the way you want them. a new look
and feel with a large number of downloadable
themes which alter the appearance of the client,
and the ability to add UI extensions.

Xapian is a search engine library, scalable to collections containing hundreds of millions of documents. It's written in C++ with bindings for Perl, Python, PHP, Java, Tcl, C#, Ruby, and Lua. It is a highly adaptable toolkit that allows developers to easily add advanced indexing and search facilities to their own applications. It supports the Probabilistic Information Retrieval model and also a rich set of boolean query operators. Omega is a Web search application built upon the Xapian library. It can index a Web server's document tree (including HTML, PDF, OpenOffice, MS Word/Excel/Powerpoint/Works, WordPerfect, RTF, PS, etc.), or data exported from arbitrary sources (e.g. SQL databases).

WinAdminPassword is a tool for deploying unique passwords on Windows and Unix systems. Passwords are based on the computer's serial number and a secret key. The advantage is that no password is stored in a database and you can display them with a GLPI plugin, Webmin, etc.

OSGET is a mobile game engine template based on the EMO framework, which uses the Squirrel scripting language to support Android and iOS. The template includes common gaming features such as an introductory splash page, changing between level scenes, integrated player control, physical behaviors such as velocity against gravitational force, object collision detection and handling, background scrolling, playing of different audio channels, event triggering at timeout intervals, level missions, final level missions with bosses, and score submission through HTTP. It is based on the MVC pattern.

seaLISP is a Lisp interpreter with as many bells and whistles as possible but with absolutely no dependencies apart from the C++ standard library. The garbage collector, the computer algebra library, and all other components are written from scratch to be portable. It also has a PSP port with some primitives for graphics.

xlife is a laboratory for experimenting with cellular automata. It supports loadable rulesets and palettes, different topologies, and up to 256-state cellular automata. It has rules and patterns for Life, Brian's Brain, Perrier's Loops, Langton's Ants and Loops, Wireworld, E.F. Codd's 1975 UCC automaton, some Prisoner's Dilemma games, and many others. It is very fast for step-by-step mode, bounded grid, and chaotic patterns. It has several unique features: a historical mode, a pseudocolor mode, and n-state statistics. It has been developed since 1989. The modern version of Xlife began its history in 2011.